February 1, 1974
An agreement ending the month-long strike in Southern
California's retail food industry was ratified by union members
Jan. 5.

A coalition of unions, including Teamsters, Butchers,
Operating Engineers, and Machinists, representing 22,000
workers, struck three leading supermarket chains on Dec. 3.

In retaliation, members of the antiunion Food Employers
Council locked out members of striking unions at all of its
members stores. This affected the jobs of an estimated 100,000
workers.

Members of the different unions got different settlements
out of the strike. These included wages increases, raises in
pension fund contributions, and - for Teamsters - an end to
compulsory overtime for 25 percent of its membership. Meat
Cutters, Teamsters, and Operating Engineers also won a modified
escalator clause.

A key issue for the Meat Cutters was the "new methods
clause." The jobs of thousands of butchers have been
jeopardized by the introduction of machinery to speed up
production. While maintaining the right to strike over this
question in Northern California, the butchers failed in efforts
to get this provision extended to contracts in Southern
California.

January 31, 1949
When a clique of Army officers staged a coup d'etat in
Caracas, Venezuela, Nov. 24, the U.S. State Department hastened
to announce that the property of investors in Venezuela was
"safe" but that it was still "too early" to discuss formal
recognition of the military conspirators. The overthrown
Gallegos government had polled 70 percent of the vote in a free
election last spring. The smashing of such a democratically-
elected regime shocked public opinion in the United States and
the Truman administration was sharply criticized for its role
in fostering to totalitarianism in Latin America. On Jan. 21,
not even two months since the officer clique seized power by
force and violence, the administration recognized the plotters
as the legal government of Venezuela.

A State Department spokesman announced with the usual poker
face of an imperialist diplomat that this "delay" was
deliberately designed to make "abundantly clear" that it
considered forcible overturns not only deplorable but usually
inconsistent with the acknowledged ideals of the American
Republic. The military gangsters who brought totalitarianism to
power in Venezuela gun in hand made no comment. Nor did the oil
companies, mainly Standard Oil and Royal Dutch Shell, who have
some $2 billion worth of investment in Venezuela.